The bar (symbol bar) and the millibar (symbol mbar, also mb) are units of pressure. They are not SI units, but accepted (although discouraged) for use with the SI. The bar is still widely used in descriptions of pressure because it is about the same as atmospheric pressure.
(A pascal is one newton per square meter.)
The bar and millibar were introduced by Sir Napier Shaw in 1909 and internationally adopted in 1929.
Americans are familiar with the millibar in US reports of hurricanes and other cyclonic storms, where lower central pressure generally means higher winds and a stronger storm.
In everyday use, pressure is often measured with reference to atmospheric pressure. This is gauge pressure and denoted by barg, often written with no spaces, spoken "bar gauge", and sometimes using symbols such as 'bar(g)'. For example, if someone says that their car tyres are pressured up to 2.3 bar they actually mean bar gauge: the pressure in the tyre is really 3.3 bar, but only 2.3 bar above atmospheric, which is the scale a tyre gauge would read. When absolute pressure is desired, it is sometimes denoted 'bara' or 'bar(a)' for "bar absolute". The alteration of units of measure for this purpose is now deprecated, with qualification of the physical property being preferred, e.g., "The gauge pressure is 2.3 bar; the absolute pressure is 3.3 bar".
Unicode has a character for "mb": (), but exists only for compatibility with legacy Asian encodings; it should not be used in new texts.
Bar | Bar | Bar (jednotka) | Bar (Einheit) | Bar (unidad de presión) | Bar | Bar (unité) | Bar (unità di misura) | בר (מידה) | Bar (druk) | バール (単位) | Bar (jednostka) | Bar (pressão) | Бар (единица измерения) | Bar (enota) | Baari | Bar (måttenhet) | Бар (одиниця тиску) | 巴
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"Bar (unit)".
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